The second of three presentations I gave to doctoral and post-doctoral students attending a special summer workshop on social justice, hosted at the Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar in Ahmedabad, India.

The inaugural podcast of the IJHS journal, which I founded and presently advise, features myself and Stephen Kutcher discussing the present Canadian federal election through the lens of health scientists.

Part 2 of my conversation with public health expert Patrick Saunders-Hastings, in which we cover everything from whether breastfeeding makes babies smarter to whether your horoscope can predict your health.

California just made it it mandatory for children to be vaccinated against certain diseases. To talk about this event, and related topics in vaccination research, I spoke to public health expert Patrick Saunders-Hastings.

This is the first of 7 guest podcasts produced by the graduate students of the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences. In today’s episode, Lynne Jrade, Andréanne Chaumont, Jennifer Kathleen Cano, and Katrina MacFarlane discuss a paper about defining race.

The fifteenth and last in a series of special podcasts featuring the students of my 4th year International Health Theory class. This installment has been produced by Laetitia Kayitesi and Idil Houssein.

The twelfth in a series of special podcasts featuring the students of my 4th year International Health Theory class. This installment has been produced by Swanti Deut, Yan Yan Lee, Sally Zhao, and Rima Elchamaa.

The eighth in a series of special podcasts featuring the students of my 4th year International Health Theory class. This installment has been produced by Paul Do, Irene Fosu-Apraku, Pooneh Mirzakhalili, and Ahlam Awata.

The seventh in a series of special podcasts featuring the students of my 4th year International Health Theory class. This installment has been produced by Gavin Maludzinski, Cara Elliott, Melissa Sutaroski, and Haley Rowlandson.

The sixth in a series of special podcasts featuring the students of my 4th year International Health Theory class. This installment has been produced by Quinn Howard, Habon Warsame, Ihab Kandil, and Abdiasis Yalahow.

The fifth in a series of special podcasts featuring the students of my 4th year International Health Theory class. This installment has been produced by Khalil Dawod, Sarah Hognestad, Emma Daymond, and Clive Velkers.

The fourth in a series of special podcasts featuring the students of my 4th year International Health Theory class. This episode was produced by Danielle Hemet, Simran Sandhu, Laura Cummings, and Arlanna Pugh.

This is the first of a series of special podcast episodes which will feature my students. As part of my 4th year class in International Health Theory, each group (or individual) selected a scholarly paper on an issue in global health and recorded a brief audio dissection of its implications. This episode is by Kinsey Beck.

As the University of Ottawa was in “lockdown” due to the shootings in Parliament, all classes were cancelled. Unfortunately, four students and I still showed up to my international health class. So I gave those four the lecture on “Hunger and Food Security”, recording the audio so I could stream it here.

Yesterday, a gunman murdered an unarmed soldier guarding the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Ottawa, then proceeded to shoot up Parliament itself before being killed by one of the Parliamentary constables. In this episode, I observe the tone of the city and the university campus during the lockdown.

Interviewed by Caity Jackson of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden for the YouTube show, “This Week In Global Health with Dr Greg Martin,” on the topics of global health ethics, career planning, and the future of global health.

A lecture to my 4th year International Health Theory class about the “missing girls of India”, the millions of unborn Indian girls removed from the projected population through generations of sex selective abortion.

Assistant Editor of CMAJ, and new Editor in Chief of the CSEB National Newsletter, Erin Russell was kind enough to give a brief workshop to the editors of our student-run journal, the Interdisciplinary Journal of Health Sciences.